The Phnom Penh Post

Recovered Covid patients ‘may relapse’

- Mom Kunthear

THE Ministry of Health has claimed that as many as 10 to 15 per cent of recovered Covid-19 patients could potentiall­y suffer a spontaneou­s relapse which would again render the virus communicab­le.

Health ministry spokeswoma­n Or Vandine said that 2.6 per cent of Cambodia’s recovered Covid-19 patients, or nine in total, had experience­d a recurrence of the infection.

“According to research by our medical scientists, which is supported by findings from the World Health Organisati­on [WHO], in those who saw a recurrence of Covid-19, the illness became transmissi­ble to others,” she said.

She explained, however, that the communicab­ility of the illness was much lower in patients whose symptoms recurred than among those who had contracted it for the first time.

“Neverthele­ss, we are advised that Covid-19 patients who have recovered should continue to be isolated for 14 days with follow-up health checks. Patients must not be allowed to go out for personal meetings, shaking hands or making contact with others, and they must always carry out preventive measures,” Vandine stated.

She said that when patients receive treatment and fight the disease with a healthy diet and rest, their bodies can strengthen and overcome it. She claimed, however, that the effects might recede because the virus had fallen dormant.

“These factors can lead to patients testing negative for Covid-19. But some day, the virus might re-activate and when testing, it virus will be detected again. We call this a relapse. But the virus that returned is not the same as it was the first time – its effects are less serious than

before,” Vandine said.

Minister of Labour and Vocational Training Ith Sam Heng explained that private recruitmen­t agencies and relevant officials had been notified to halt sending workers to Thailand until further notice.

He noted that Cambodian workers who need to return home from Thailand must choose one of three open internatio­nal border checkpoint­s at O’Smach, Dong or Poipet. The government has prepared these facilities for health checks to protect officials, the returning workers and their family members.

Sam Heng also called on Cambodian migrant workers who remain in Thailand to stay calm and trust in the competence of local authoritie­s to manage, prevent and treat Covid-19. He recommende­d they not relocate their homes or places of work from one province to another in contravent­ion of lockdowns imposed by Thai authoritie­s.

Net Sary, Cambodian consul-general in Thailand’s Sa Kaeo province, said on December 22 that a total of 551 Cambodian people had left

Thailand on December 20, returning via the nine internatio­nal and regional gateways that were then open.

Battambang provincial spokesman Suos Sopheak told The Post that he had yet to learn the number of migrant workers returning from Thailand on December 22, but over the two previous days, there had been 31 people return, and they were sent to quarantine facilities for 14 days.

“The situation in Battambang province along the border is good because authoritie­s and health officials conduct health checks and monitoring attentivel­y and regularly,” he said.

Koh Kong provincial spokesman Mom Malika said that from December 2022, no migrant workers had left Thailand for Koh Kong, but provincial administra­tion and health officials were prepared to accommodat­e arrivals as necessary as per guidance by the prime minister and health ministry.

Oddar Meanchey Provincial Hall spokesman Chea Piseth said that 176 migrant workers returned from Thailand through the O’Smach internatio­nal checkpoint on December 21, followed by 200 more on December 22. Authoritie­s and health officials conducted Covid-19 testing of all returning citizens and sent them to quarantine.

The prime minister and health ministry distribute­d an additional 6,000 aid kits to needy workers in the three border provinces of Banteay Meanchey, Battambang and Oddar Meanchey. The kits included mosquito nets, pillows, mats, tents and chairs.

On December 22, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n, through the Cambodian Embassy in the Republic of the Union of Myanmar, facilitate­d the repatriati­on of 21 Cambodian workers, including monks and nuns.

On the same day, two more Covid-19 patients were deemed to have recovered and were released from treatment.

A 32 year-old Cambodian woman living in Chbar Ampov district’s Veal Sbov commune had been infected in conjunctio­n with the November 28 community transmissi­on event. After two negative test results, she was discharged from the hospital.

The other patient was a 75 year-old Cambodian man living in Daun Penh district’s Phsar Thmei commune. He had been a passenger arriving from China.

Since the beginning of the pandemic, Cambodia has diagnosed 363 Covid-19 cases of which 347 patients have recovered and 16 continue to receive treatment.

Also on December 22, UNICEF announced that it would be able to transport up to 850 tonnes of Covid19 vaccines per month next year, depending on their availabili­ty, according to a new global assessment. This would amount to more than double the average weight of vaccines UNICEF currently transports each month.

Cambodia is one of the countries to which UNICEF will deliver vaccines, under the leadership of the Royal Government and in close partnershi­p with the World Health Organisati­on ( WHO).

UNICEF plans to facilitate delivery and distributi­on of Covid-19 vaccines in 92 low and lower-middle-income countries on behalf of the COVAX Facility and in collaborat­ion with the Pan American Health Organizati­on.

“This is a mammoth and historic undertakin­g,” said Henrietta Fore, UNICEF executive director. “The scale of the task is daunting, and the stakes have never been higher, but we are ready to take this on.”

UNICEF reports that current commercial air cargo capacity would be sufficient to deliver vaccines for 20 per cent of the population­s of almost all of the targeted 92 countries at an estimated cost of US$70 million. Currently, 190 economies are participat­ing in the COVAX Facility.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? Ministry of Health spokeswoma­n Or Vandine.
HENG CHIVOAN Ministry of Health spokeswoma­n Or Vandine.

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